There's something hugely enjoyable about a full-blooded, no-holds-barred performance of Carmen. None of the singers in this afternoon's Vienna State Opera recording strike me as particularly polished or ideally cast, but my word they're really going for it.
Blood, guts, sex, bulls and smugglers
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He's a challenge: he's not interested in her, so she goes after him. That's the initial attraction. And maybe her interest brings out something new in him - you can't imagine the chap we first meet having the guts to desert, fall in with a band of criminals and then commit murder, so he obviously has changed a bit. But it's interesting that at the end he just meekly (a) confesses and (b) asks to be arrested. So his essential wimpiness - or perhaps his essential decency - wasn't that far buried after all.Last edited by Bert Coules; 23-12-10, 18:34.
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I love the opera. I believe it to be the first Verismo opera. Carmen is out to enjoy herself and as hard as nails. Don Jose is sadly bipolar and cannot see a life as it is. Bizet, Puccini, Janacek, Charpentier wrote the real in your face operas. Oh, OK! I better let Cav, Pag and Peter Grimes in as well.
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Daring Tripod
I also thoroughly enjoyed this full blooded performance. The performers and conductor really had the ‘bit between their teeth’.
It is difficult for us to understand nowadays how this work failed when it was first performed in Paris.
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Simon
It is difficult for us to understand nowadays how this work failed when it was first performed in Paris.
Chacun a son gout, of course! :-)
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Originally posted by rodney_h_d View PostI wouldn't go as far as Simon, but after experiencing many performances of Carmen and Tosca, I would now be much more likely to go and see Tosca. Madam Butterfly is Puccini's nasty one.
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